BULLETIN OF THE UNITED STATES FISH COMMISSION. 
486 
Color in alcohol, pale brown, side with 5 large brown blotches, and about 11 brown vertical cross¬ 
bars running closer together above to form pairs, though becoming indistinct on middle of side; a 
narrow blackish line across top of head down behind and below eye to corner of maxillary; a blackish, 
brown blotch' at base of pectoral; spinous dorsal dark gray with oblique dusky hues; soft dorsal pale 
with a number of longitudinal dusky lines sloping backward; anal dark gray, the membrane between 
the rays blackish; caudal grayish with cross series of dusky spots; pectoral pale gray; ventrals gray 
black, margin and anterior portion pale brown. Described from an example (No. 846) taken at Hilo. 
The species is common along the shores and in shallow water about Honolulu, Waikiki, and Hilo. 
The collection contains 46 examples 2.4 to 5.8 inches long. 
(jobionellus lonchotus Jenkins. Bull. t\ s. Fish Comm., XXII, 1902 (Sept. 23, 1903), 503, fig. 44. Honolulu (type, Xu. 60698, 
U, 8. N. M.; coll. O. 1 J . Jenkins). 
Geaus 237 VITRARIA Jordan & Evermann. 
Body elongate, translucent, covered with very small, thin scales; mouth small, oblique; teeth 
minute; gill-opening rather narrow; dorsals small, the rays vu-ll ; pectoral rather long; ventrals small, 
united in a circular disk. Small gobies of the coral reefs, allied to the Japanese genus danger, but 
with the first, dorsal of 7 small spines instead of 3. 
I 'Uraria Jordan & Evermann, Bull. U. 8. Fish Comm., XXII, 1902 (Apr. 11, 1903), 205 irlarcscrns), 
401. Vitraria clarescens Jordan & Evermann. Plate 60. 
Head 4.6 in length; depth 6.7; eye 3.5 in head; snout 4.5; D. vn-11; A. I, 10. 
Body elongate, slender, compressed, greatest depth between dorsal fins; head elongate; pointed, 
conic, depth 1.75 in its length, width 2; snout rather long, rounded; jaws prominent, upper slightly 
produced; mouth oblique, maxillary reaching a little beyond anterior margin of eye; teeth not evident, 
tongue broad, truncate; snout above interorbital space and top of head more or less flattened; nostrils 
well separated, anterior nearly midway in length of snout, posterior close to front of eye; eye rather 
large, anterior; gill-opening restricted to side, rather small; scales very small; dorsal spines flexible; 
first dorsal small, the last 3 spines very small (minute stubs, broken in the type), the fin beginning 
behind tip of ventrals; soft dorsal beginning a little nearer base of caudal than tip of snout, about 
over insertion of anal, anterior rays of both tins longest, those of anal gradually smaller behind, the 
last, 2 minute and close together; caudal emarginate, lobes rounded; pectoral rather long, lower rays 
longest; ventrals small, united to form a small round disk whose diameter is 2.25 in head; caudal 
peduncle compressed, elongate, its length equal to head, its depth 2.25 in head. 
Color in alcohol, very pale translucent brown, 7 V-shaped pale brown markings on upper side of 
body united over back; fins whitish. 
We have examined 7 examples obtained at Hilo, each about 1.2 inches in length. 
Yitniria darcscms Jordan it Evermann, Butt. U. S. Fish Comm., XXII, 1902 (Apr. 11, 1903), 205, Hilo. 
Genus 238. CHLAMYDES Jenkins. 
This genus is distinguished from Gqbius and Mapq by the presence of scales on sides of head. 
i’lilamydes Jenkins, Bull. U. s. Fish Comm., XXII, 1902 (Sept. 23, 1903), 503 (lalicept). t 
♦ 
402. Chlamydes laticeps Jenkins. Fig. 214. 
Head 3 in length; depth 4; width of head 0.8 of its length, depth 1.5 in its length; P. vi-l, 9; A. 
i, 8; (!. 17; ventral fins united, i, 5; scales 38,-14; head depressed; ventral profile almost straight; dorsal 
profile rising in very gentle curve from tip of snout to nape; dorsal and ventral outlines of body straight 
and parallel from base of first dorsal to front of anal, from here slightly converging to base of caudal 
fin; height of caudal peduncle 2.25 in head, 1.6 in height of body at front of dorsal fin; mouth almost 
horizontal; snout flat, broad, equal to eye, 3.5 in length of head; interorbital very narrow, less than 
diameter of pupil; eyes inclined at angle of 45° on sides of head; snout bluntly rounded from above; 
top and sides of head scaled to posterior border of pupil; branchiostegals 4; teeth villiform, in bands on 
each ja’w; an outer series of enlarged teeth in the upper jaw; fourth dorsal spine longest, 2.5 in head; 
rays of second dorsal of nearly uniform height, slightly longer than fourth spine, 2.3 in head; caudal 
